When the station announced it wanted to "decouple" the Hottest 100 from Australia Day, it said the countdown would be now held on the final weekend of January. This left the door open to the countdown occasionally falling on January 26, including in 2019.

Fans of the music countdown have waited months to find out when the Hottest 100 would be broadcast next year, leading some listeners to conclude the 2019 countdown would in fact occur on Australia Day as it had traditionally been from the late '90s until last year.

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This year's Hottest 100 was held on Saturday, January 27 after a listener survey found the majority of fans supporting changing the date.

On Wednesday, the youth broadcaster confirmed the countdown would take place on a Sunday next year. A triple J spokeswoman declined to comment on the reasons for the decision.

Last year, Communications Minister Mitch Fifield said he was "bewildered" by the decision to move the Hottest 100 away from Australia Day.

"The ABC shouldn't be buying into this debate," he said. "Australia is our national day. The ABC should honour it and not mess with the Hottest 100."

However, the ABC defended its decision by citing a listener survey that revealed more than half of triple j listeners supported the date-change. Triple j bosses also said the change was about trying to de-politicise the Hottest 100 by moving it away from a now-contentious date.

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Earlier this year, it was revealed former ABC chairman Justin Milne tried to stop triple J from changing the date of its popular music countdown. Speaking on the ABC's Four Corners program, former managing director Michelle Guthrie said she resisted because she was convinced triple J had done the appropriate research and should be able to make its own programming decisions.

Voting for next year's Hottest 100 countdown opens next week, with polls closing on Tuesday, January 22.